For men, the potential consequences of infection by the human papillomavirus are nasty, like genital warts, and even life-threatening, as penile and anal cancers. But these complications are quite rare. For the average guy, the virus lies silent, doesn't cause problems, and clears in a year or two.

Still, HPV is the most common sexually
transmitted disease in the United States, and the federal Advisory
Committee on Immunization Practices is deliberating whether to issue a public
recommendation that boys and men be vaccinated with Gardasil, the only HPV vaccine
approved for that group, just as it's recommended for women. There is no easy
answer. Experts must weigh the cost of immunizing against the benefits, which
could include fewer cases of HPV-related cervical
cancer in female partners but most of the time is just about staving off a
few relatively harmless warts. They also want to wait and see whether the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration will allow Gardasil maker Merck to market the
vaccine for the prevention of anal cancer; currently it is approved for
preventing cervical cancer in females between the ages of 9 and 26 and genital
warts in males and females in that same age group. The FDA is expected to make
a decision by the end of the year. ACIP officials will consider the FDA's
action in making their recommendation, which could come as soon as February,
says Lauri Markowitz, leader of ACIP's HPV working group. For now, though, men
and parents of boys are on their own. They can request the three-shot series,
and doctors are free to provide it.

So far, however, demand has been underwhelming.
"Let's just say they're not knocking down the doors asking for it,"
says Michael Rich, an associate professor of pediatrics at Children's
Hospital Boston. And from a professional perspective, he says, "It's
not a standard protocol for your average 11-year-old boy, you know, troopin' in
for his physical." But it's still something some parents will ponder.

The decision may be easier for men and parents who
believe that males and females have a shared responsibility in preventing STDs.
Johns
Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Professor Neal Halsey falls into
that group. Widespread vaccination, he says, is the best way to control HPV and
avoid its potentially serious effects-and it's also the most ethical. Men
infected with one of a few strains of HPV who pass it on to female sexual
partners put them at risk for cervical cancer if they haven't been vaccinated
themselves, which the government advises to prevent that form of cancer. And men
who have sex with men are at greater risk for HPV-related anal cancer, which
affects 1,100 men a year.

Vaccinating boys when they are 11 or 12 would be the most
effective timing, catching the vast majority of them before their "sexual
debut," says James Turner, the American College Health Association's
liaison to ACIP and director of the University of Virginia's Student Health
Center.

Besides cancer, the thought of genital warts alone may
convince a man to get vaccinated, says Turner. The warts, which affect about 1
percent of sexually active men at any given time, typically aren't painful,
respond readily to freezing with a little liquid nitrogen at the doctor's
office or even an at-home gel, and are considered a fairly "trivial
medical condition," he says. But he still regards them as destructive. The
warts can pop up months or years after the initial infection. In the interim, a
man wouldn't know if he was infected. If he develops a close relationship, his
significant other would need to take his word at the start that he was free of
HPV. And if he develops genital warts later, his other half would also have to
take on faith that he really did contract the virus before they got
together. "Believe me, a genital wart can be a devastating occurrence in
an otherwise monogamous intimate relationship," says Turner, basing his
view on the college students he has worked with. At the University
of Virginia, roughly 10 percent of the current male population have been
vaccinated. That's pretty high, he says, most likely because of an active gay
and bisexual community and a student health plan that covers the three-shot
vaccine's $400 price tag

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